
In brief
- The OpenAI Foundation committed an initial $250 million to grants, partnerships, and direct work aimed at supporting the economic impact of AI disruption.
- The funding targets three areas: understanding AI’s economic shift, supporting worker transition, and building new economic security systems.
- The initiative forms part of a broader $1 billion investment commitment by OpenAI over the next year.
The OpenAI Foundation announced Wednesday that it would commit an initial $250 million to help societies prepare for the economic upheaval expected to accompany the rapid spread of artificial intelligence—an acknowledgment from within the AI industry itself that the technology’s gains could negatively impact large swaths of the workforce.
The ChatGPT maker’s foundation said money will flow through grants, partnerships, and direct work organized around three priorities: understanding how AI is reshaping the economy, supporting workers through near-term disruption, and building new structures for sharing the long-term benefits of automation broadly.
The foundation’s announcement, authored by Divya Siddarth and Wojciech Zaremba, argues that existing economic measurement tools—including labor statistics and GDP—were built for a different era and may fail to capture how AI redistributes value among workers, firms, consumers, and capital owners.
The foundation said it wants to help build the next generation of that infrastructure, including better real-time labor market data and updated occupational mapping systems.
“AI is going to lead to huge economic changes as it makes previously scarce capabilities far more widely available, and there is deep uncertainty about how far and how fast they will go,” they wrote. “The breadth of possibilities makes this an extraordinary opportunity to build systems that enable better lives for people now and in the future. But the current pace of change means the window to get this right is shorter than we’re used to, and the cost of getting it wrong is immense.”
On worker assistance, the foundation said traditional retraining programs have mixed evidence and that any transition agenda would likely need to be broader, encompassing wage loss insurance, job search support, and pathways into growing sectors.
The announcement also ventures into more politically charged territory. The foundation said it wants to explore proposals such as shifting taxation from labor toward capital, windfall, or excess-returns mechanisms, and public or sovereign wealth fund models—drawing on examples like Norway’s Government Pension Fund and Alaska’s Permanent Fund—as potential tools for distributing AI-generated wealth more widely.
The OpenAI Foundation said it expects to announce its first funded initiatives later this year.
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